"Regardless of the nature of the military secrets, but we differed at a moment regarding the Syrian issue," said Hamas political official Salah al-Bardawil. "[Hizballah] and Iran were angry, even though we only meant for them to stay out of the muddled situation in Syria and not interfere-- we offered this as a recommendation.

"Nevertheless, we do not deny that cooperation exists between '[Hizballah]' and 'Hamas.'"

Al-Bardawil also reaffirmed that calls by Fatah to disarm Hamas' military wing in exchange for reconciliation between the two Palestinian factions were a non-starter.

Hizballah leader Hassan Nasrallah announced last month that his group sent Russian-made Kornet anti-tank missiles to Hamas in Gaza.

Israeli strategists anticipate that the Jewish state could face a two-front war against both Hizballah and Hamas in a future conflict. In addition to Hizballah, Israel faces the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) and other Shiite militias based in Syria.

"There are no more one-front wars. That is our basic assumption. That is what we are preparing the military for," Israeli Defense Minister Avigdor Liberman said in last month.

A two-front war could prove costly for Israel because it means all of Israel would be in range of terrorist rockets. A 2015 Israel Defense Forces (IDF) assessment found that Hizballah could rain 1,000 rockets per day onto Israeli cities, causing hundreds of civilian casualties.

That's not to mention the threat from ISIS in the Sinai where Egypt is losing its fight to contain the jihadis. ISIS – whose fighters in Sinai have been trained and armed by Hamas – launched a rocket attack against southern Israel in October.

Israel's next war will be very different from anything it's faced in decades, as the Jewish state hasn't fought a two-front war since the 1973 Yom Kippur War.